Don't Think It Is Just The Depression Generation
That is tight with money and or careful with savings. Anyone who has grown up not having much and or doing without lives with that experience the rest of their lives. As adults many either follow two lines: either they spend every cent they get, cluttering up their homes with "stuff" to make up for all those years of not having; or, they are as tight fisted as their parents and always worried about and saving for "hard times". The latter are usually the sort of persons that leave estates with lots of money socked away, and or where you find money hidden away in socks, drawers, inside of walls (that one was on the news), etc. Brand new things put away wrapped up tight, never used, while even their everyday things are well taken care of.
Closest thing many bommers have to remembering the Depression, was the inflation (stagflation) of the 1970's and early 1980's. It was the beginning of manufacturing closing US plants and moving overseas, Big Steel was being shoved aside by imports, and lastly imported cars started to kill Detroit.
That is tight with money and or careful with savings. Anyone who has grown up not having much and or doing without lives with that experience the rest of their lives. As adults many either follow two lines: either they spend every cent they get, cluttering up their homes with "stuff" to make up for all those years of not having; or, they are as tight fisted as their parents and always worried about and saving for "hard times". The latter are usually the sort of persons that leave estates with lots of money socked away, and or where you find money hidden away in socks, drawers, inside of walls (that one was on the news), etc. Brand new things put away wrapped up tight, never used, while even their everyday things are well taken care of.
Closest thing many bommers have to remembering the Depression, was the inflation (stagflation) of the 1970's and early 1980's. It was the beginning of manufacturing closing US plants and moving overseas, Big Steel was being shoved aside by imports, and lastly imported cars started to kill Detroit.